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Asian Cooking (alt.food.asian) A newsgroup for the discussion of recipes, ingredients, equipment and techniques used specifically in the preparation of Asian foods. |
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When I have travelled in the far east (China etc) I have eaten fantastic
seafood sauces- but it is hard to find them in any cookbook. Anyone have any suggestions? /Amazonica |
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"Åsa Eriksson" > wrote in message
... > When I have travelled in the far east (China etc) I have eaten fantastic > seafood sauces- but it is hard to find them in any cookbook. Anyone have > any > suggestions? > /Amazonica there's lots, any coastal or even inland water areas have fish/seafood dishes, where do you want start? the Far East is a big place. Feshness of fish/seafood is very important & i think that's where some of the tastes comes from in any good sauces. You've probably seen fish swimming in tanks at restautrants there or freshly caught & cooked, not like what we get in the west, frozen or on ice. This is a very large area of discussion, if you could specify that would be easier. But as a start... here's a simple recipe. steamed seabass. 1 medium fresh seabass, gutted, cleaned & scaled (leave head & all fins/tails on) place the fish on a plate & cut a thumbsize ginger into fine shreds & place under fish, inside stomach cavity & on top of fish. You will need a wok or pot big enough to take the plate inside, fill the wok or pot with 1 inch of water & place a trivet or a small tin/can with the top & bottom removed so it looks like a ring. Cover the wok or pot & bring it to a rapid boil. Once boiling, carefully place the plate with seabass inside & cover immediately. Continue to boil on high heat for 5mins then bring it down to simmer for another 5 mins. In the meantime, take a rice bowl & pour in 2tsp rice wine, 2tbsp light soy sauce, a little salt & sugar & mix. Next finely slice a few spring onions & set aside. Next pour in 2-3 tbsp veg. oil into a small sauce pan & gently heat it. When the fish is done (5mins high heat + 5mins simmering - you will have to experiment with steaming at home, it's an art that takes time), turn the heat up on the 2-3 tbsp of oil & very very quickly remove the fish plate from the steamer & pour away some of the excess water in the plate but not all of it, fish juices are tasty! quickly throw the sliced spring onions over & pour the soy sauce marinade over the seabass & finally pour over the 2-3 tbsp of hot smoking oil all over the fish. The oil should be very hot & you should hear it *sear* or even *crackle* as it hits the steamed seabass. The smell & aroma will tell you if you've done it right or not ; ) Alternatively go & buy a bottle of LeeKumKee seafood marinade, it's the same as above but use it carefully. The last bottle i had over specified the amount to use! Another tip - some seafood sauces use dried shrimps & scallops rehydrated in hot water, this gives it a strong seafood taste. If you can imagine sundried tomatoes or dried mushrooms, once rehydrated the flavours are stronger, same thing but that's another post ; ) DC. |
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"Åsa Eriksson" > wrote:
> When I have travelled in the far east (China etc) I have eaten fantastic > seafood sauces- but it is hard to find them in any cookbook. Anyone have > any suggestions? > Åsa, many Thai seafood recipes use good and spicey sauces. I highly recommend "Thai Home-Cooking from Kamolmal's Kitchen" Out of print, but should be available used from Amazon and such. HTH -- Nick. Support severely wounded and disabled War on Terror Veterans and their families: http://saluteheroes.org/ & http://www.woundedwarriorproject.org/ Thank a Veteran and Support Our Troops. You are not forgotten. Thanks ! ! ! |
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"SOHOT Gourmet Hot Sauce" > wrote:
> For the best gourmet hot sauce go he > > http://www.geocities.com/girl2girl416/SPAM.html The OP asked for a recipe, not a commercial product! -- Nick. Support severely wounded and disabled War on Terror Veterans and their families: http://saluteheroes.org/ & http://www.woundedwarriorproject.org/ Thank a Veteran and Support Our Troops. You are not forgotten. Thanks ! ! ! |
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Åsa Eriksson wrote:
> When I have travelled in the far east (China etc) I have eaten fantastic > seafood sauces- but it is hard to find them in any cookbook. Anyone have any > suggestions? > /Amazonica > > mmmmm...butter!! ![]() (ok lemon too) |
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![]() > wrote in message ... > "SOHOT Gourmet Hot Sauce" > wrote: > > For the best gourmet hot sauce go he > > > > http://www.geocities.com/girl2girl416/SPAM.html > > The OP asked for a recipe, not a commercial product! > Looks like Yahoo have dropped his site for spamming. Pity, but the spambots can still get him he Graeme...it's probably crap. |
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Åsa Eriksson wrote:
> When I have travelled in the far east (China etc) I have eaten fantastic > seafood sauces- but it is hard to find them in any cookbook. Anyone have any > suggestions? > /Amazonica > > There's a few at Kasma Loha-Unchit's site: http://www.thaifoodandtravel.com/recipe.html Ian |
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